| The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language: Fourth Edition. 2000. |
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| attribute |
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| SYLLABICATION: | at·trib·ute |
| PRONUNCIATION: | -tr b y t |
| TRANSITIVE VERB: | Inflected forms: at·trib·ut·ed, at·trib·ut·ing, at·trib·utes 1. To relate to a particular cause or source; ascribe: attributed their failure to a lack of preparation. 2. To regard as the work of a specified agent, place, or time: attributed the painting to Titian; attributed the vase to 18th-century Japan. | | NOUN: | at·tri·bute ( t r -by t ) 1. A quality or characteristic inherent in or ascribed to someone or something. 2. An object associated with and serving to identify a character, personage, or office: Lightning bolts are an attribute of Zeus. 3. Grammar A word or phrase syntactically subordinate to another word or phrase that it modifies; for example, my sister's and brown in my sister's brown dog. | | ETYMOLOGY: | Latin attribuere, attrib t- : ad-, ad- + tribuere, to allot; see tribute. | | OTHER FORMS: | at·trib ut·a·ble ADJECTIVE at·trib ut·er, at·trib u·tor NOUN
| | SYNONYMS: | attribute, ascribe, impute, credit, assign, refer These verbs mean to consider as resulting from or belonging to a person or thing. Attribute and ascribe, often interchangeable, have the widest application: The historian discovered a new symphony attributed to Mozart. The museum displayed an invention ascribed to the 15th century. Impute is often used in laying guilt or fault to another: We usually ascribe good; but impute evil (Samuel Johnson). Credit frequently applies to an accomplishment or virtue: Some excellent remarks were made on immortality, but mainly borrowed from and credited to Plato (Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr.). Assign and refer are often used to classify or categorize: Program music as a genre is usually assigned to the Romantic period. A person thus prepared will be able to refer any particular history he takes up to its proper place in universal history (Joseph Priestley).See also synonyms at quality.
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| The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition. Copyright © 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by the Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. |
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